Is she really that out of touch? As Fox Business host Charles Payne noted in a tweet, Wasserman Schultz represents a district where the median household income is $50,000. Does she think her constituents wouldn’t welcome a $1,000 windfall?

Wasserman Schultz also neglected to mention the pay hikes announced by many companies, including AT&T, Wells Fargo, Fifth Third Bancorp, Boeing, Walmart and Comcast, that will make a permanent difference to workers going forward.

Is Debbie not keeping up? Or is she so panicked over the avalanche of good economic news triggered by the Trump agenda that she can no longer bear to read the headlines?

Here’s the bad news for Democrats: The good news from the tax bill is going to be bigger and more powerful in the months ahead, leading right up to the fall elections. The most important number contained in the fourth-quarter GDP report was a 6.8-percent rise in business nonresidential investment.

That is a notable acceleration from the 6.2-percent gain of the first three quarters and is a remarkable turnaround from Obama’s eight years in office when, as The Wall Street Journal noted, such spending “underperformed.”

Rising capital spending means increased productivity; with new machines and more efficient plants, workers are able to make more goods. Economists have long cited the lackluster productivity growth of recent years for sluggish wage gains.

The increase in investment spending will accelerate not only because of increased business confidence but also because the GOP tax bill allows immediate expensing of capital goods purchases. Businesses of all kinds report they are stepping up modernization projects to take advantage of the generous new tax treatment.

Apple announced capital spending of $30 billion in the U.S. over the next five years, while Comcast has committed to spending $50 billion. Orders for capital goods are through the roof, up 11.4 percent in the fourth quarter; higher output will follow.

In contrast to this more favorable treatment of capital-good spending, under Obama, taxes were raised on investment income, including on dividends, capital gains and profits, reducing after-tax returns. As an editorial in Investor’s Business Daily noted in 2016, “Investment taxes are up by as much as 60% since the end of the George W. Bush years (from 15% to 23.8%).”

Wasserman Schultz and Pelosi haven’t addressed the positive effect of a spending boom, because they continue to portray the GOP tax bill as only benefiting billionaires and big business. Workers, they suggest, are hung out to dry.

They fail to note Obama’s dismal record on investment and wage growth. The editorial board also targets Apple’s ability to repatriate overseas-held cash at a lower tax rate, doubting that tax planners “made the right call” by giving out such a “huge tax break.”

The incessant criticism of the tax bill initially made it “widely unpopular” according to polling, but a more in-depth survey conducted by IBD/TIPP last month showed the public approves of many if not most of the legislation’s features.

Some 57 percent agreed that corporate tax rates should be lower, 83 percent supported dropping the pass-through rate for small businesses and two-thirds likes doubling the standard deduction. As Americans open their pay envelopes next month, approval of the tax cuts will likely rise.

Democrats and The New York Times simply cannot tolerate the notion that the Trump agenda has boosted optimism and confidence and that the entire country stands to benefit. Their stalwart negativity is understandable.

Americans vote with their pocketbooks, which day by day are getting fatter. Nothing is more dangerous to Democrats’ ambitions in the upcoming elections than today’s booming stock prices and economy — except maybe lower taxes.

Liz Peek is a former partner of major bracket Wall Street firm Wertheim & Company. For 15 years, she has been a columnist for The Fiscal Times, Fox News, the New York Sun and numerous other organizations.